In Cumberland County, you'd have to search a long time to find a Liberal sign. While in the western most parts of the Annapolis Valley, NDP signs were nowhere to be found.
The most recent poll showed the NDP at 37%, the Liberals at 31% and the PCs at 28%. If that PC support is spread relatively evenly across the province (the poll suggests it gets up to 35% in rural, mainland Nova Scotia) they could risk running second in virtually every riding in the province and get a share of seats that is far less than their numbers suggest. With Liberal support concentrated in the Valley/French Shore and Cape Breton, they're likely looking at a near sweep of those regions with 31%.
I am going to make the following seat prediction
NDP 26
Lib 17
PC 9
Whoops, I was originally thinking voting day was June 2, but it is actually June 9.
1 comment:
The riding to watch is Truro-Bible Hill. Is the Hub of Nova Scotia ready for Lenore Zann?
On another note, Mr Lahey gave a keynote address at the release of the Green Party's platform.
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